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Drivers pleasure
Do drivers get pleasure from closing the doors and preventing people from
getting on?....I think the answer is yes. I reckon they time it perfectly. |
Drivers pleasure
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Drivers pleasure
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Drivers pleasure
Richard J. wrote:
wrote: Do drivers get pleasure from closing the doors and preventing people from getting on?....I think the answer is yes. I reckon they time it perfectly. In the peaks, if it means that the train runs to time and the following ones are not delayed, then that's the right thing to do, as it benefits most passengers. Yes, drivers should certainly be pleased to achieve that. Yep got the bugger, it's even better if they trap a bag or laptop, that's the only thing that I can really say I've actually achieved in a shift |
Drivers pleasure
wrote in message
... Do drivers get pleasure from closing the doors and preventing people from getting on? Not as much as Northern Line drivers get from closing the doors of a Charing Cross train at Kennington just as we're getting off a Bank one and trying to change! Miserable *******s. Ian |
Drivers pleasure
"Ian F." wrote in message ... wrote in message ... Do drivers get pleasure from closing the doors and preventing people from getting on? Not as much as Northern Line drivers get from closing the doors of a Charing Cross train at Kennington just as we're getting off a Bank one and trying to change! Miserable *******s. Do you think that they know? tim |
Drivers pleasure
"tim (not at home)" wrote in message
... Do you think that they know? Certainly. They can see/hear the train coming in on the opposite platform and know dozens of people will want to change. So they pull off just in time to make us wait for the next one! Ian (waits for someone to start going on about timetables - as if the Northern Line ever sticks to one!) ;-) |
Drivers pleasure
On Tue, 11 Mar 2008 10:10:35 -0000, "Ian F."
wrote this gibberish: "tim (not at home)" wrote in message ... Do you think that they know? Certainly. They can see/hear the train coming in on the opposite platform and know dozens of people will want to change. So they pull off just in time to make us wait for the next one! Ian (waits for someone to start going on about timetables - as if the Northern Line ever sticks to one!) ;-) the northern line has a timetable? ;) -- Mark. www.MarkVarleyPhoto.co.uk www.TwistedPhotography.co.uk www.TwistedArts.co.uk www.BeautifulBondage.net |
Drivers pleasure
On Mon, 10 Mar 2008 21:02:27 GMT, "Richard J."
wrote: wrote: Do drivers get pleasure from closing the doors and preventing people from getting on?....I think the answer is yes. I reckon they time it perfectly. In the peaks, if it means that the train runs to time and the following ones are not delayed, then that's the right thing to do, as it benefits most passengers. Yes, drivers should certainly be pleased to achieve that. No, they should be unhappy about being told to be rude to their customers In any case, isn't it quicker overall to let passengers board and so make the platfomr clearer for disembarkers from following trains? Richard J. (to email me, swap 'uk' and 'yon' in address) -- Peter Lawrence |
Drivers pleasure
On Mar 11, 6:07 pm, "Peter Lawrence" wrote:
On Mon, 10 Mar 2008 21:02:27 GMT, "Richard J." wrote: wrote: Do drivers get pleasure from closing the doors and preventing people from getting on?....I think the answer is yes. I reckon they time it perfectly. In the peaks, if it means that the train runs to time and the following ones are not delayed, then that's the right thing to do, as it benefits most passengers. Yes, drivers should certainly be pleased to achieve that. No, they should be unhappy about being told to be rude to their customers In any case, isn't it quicker overall to let passengers board and so make the platfomr clearer for disembarkers from following trains? Essentially you are saying that, at very busy stations like Victoria, every train should only leave the platform when it is full. |
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